Lydiaa wrote:
If those ethical coffee beans could be grown cheaper else where, I highly doubt they would bat an eyelid before changing locations.
This is ethical behavior. Why should they grow beans in a worse climate, poor soil, or under antagonistic governments?
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Would the company care that the place they are leaving would be out of jobs or the people they may affect?
Yes they do care, at least for logistical reasons and also because it looks bad to be constantly laying off people. Moving jobs around means people are training instead of working.
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Would having ethical coffee beans mean more feel good customers buying, thus a greater market share which in turn means greater dividends for the investors?
Yes, if they advertise this fact.
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Is it ethical to test drugs on animals?
It's ethical in my book. I want as many diseases cured as possible before I get old.
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Is it ethical to move your production to a country where there are less regulations so you could reduce cost?
Yes. Companies shouldn't be held hostage to poorly run governments. Regulations are good in some cases, for example stopping people from dumping waste into a harbor or cutting down all the forests, but they can be overdone and force away desired business.
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Is it ethical to use fear as a method of advertising?
Yes. Fear is not necessarily a bad thing, marketing to fear will have more people installing alarm systems or Microsoft Security Essentials, which are good things.
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Is it ethical to produce a product which you know will do harm to your customers?
Obviously no. This would have a chance of generating very bad PR for the company, and so most companies would never do this. It is very easy nowadays for internal documents to be leaked and put online.
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Most of the time being truly ethical takes away from the bottom line, and most of the ethical things big companies do are the result of the great PR wheel.
Most of the time it does? I'd say almost none of the time.